Agenda

The Milstein Conference Center
Wasserstein Hall, Harvard Law School 

8:00-8:10AM: Welcome

Mark Wu, Director, Harvard University Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies; Henry L. Stimson Professor, Harvard Law School
Tony Saich, Director, Harvard Kennedy School Rajawali Foundation Institute for Asia; Daewoo Professor of International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

8:10 – 9:10AM: Chinese Views on U.S.-China Relations

Two influential Chinese experts share their views of changing U.S.-China relations, in conversation with the moderator.

Moderator:
Yasheng Huang, Epoch Foundation Professor of International Management, MIT
Speakers:
Wei Da, Director, Center for International Security and Strategy; Professor at School of Social Sciences, Tsinghua University
Daojiong Zha, Professor of International Political Economy, School of International Studies, Peking University

9:10-9:20AM: Break

9:20-10:30AM: China’s Realities at Home

What domestic realities and challenges are driving and affecting the Chinese government’s goals and strategy, at home and abroad, in terms of Communist Party politics, the state of China’s economy, and social factors?

Moderator:
Tony Saich, Director, Harvard Kennedy School Rajawali Foundation Institute for Asia; Daewoo Professor of International Affairs
Speakers:
Arthur Kroeber, Founding Partner, Head of Research, Gavekal
Ya-Wen Lei, Associate Professor of Sociology, Harvard University
David Shambaugh, Founding Director, China Policy Program, Elliott School of International Affairs; Gaston Sigur Professor of Asian Studies, Political Science & International Affairs, George Washington University
Susan Shirk, Chair, 21st Century China Center; Research Professor, UC San Diego

10:45-11:55AM: Competition & Cooperation in Security, Ideas and Rules

China and the United States are competing on multiple fronts, including in promoting their values and ideas and setting international rules and standards. China is challenging and hoping to end the United States’ long-held role as predominant Indo-Pacific power, by building a “String of Pearls” presence in ports throughout Asia, the Middle East and Europe, establishing a presence near chokepoints to strategic waterways (Djibouti, Gwadar), and accelerating the modernization of China’s overall military capabilities, including developing a blue water navy capability. What does Coexistence 2.0 look like on all these fronts? Where is there still room for cooperation, and where is competition inevitable? How can the two sides avoid a hot war?

Moderator:
Graham Allison, Douglas Dillon Professor of Government and Former Dean, Harvard Kennedy School
Speakers:
Andrew Erickson, Professor of Strategy and Research Director in the Naval War College’s China Maritime Studies Institute; Visiting Professor, Department of Government, Harvard University
Taylor Fravel, Arthur and Ruth Sloan Professor of Political Science and Director, Security Studies Program, MIT
Joseph Nye, University Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus and Former Dean, Harvard Kennedy School of Government; Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs
Jessica Chen Weiss, Michael J. Zak Professor for China and Asia-Pacific Studies, Cornell University

12:00-1:15PM: Lunch (on your own)

1:15-2:25PM: Competition & Cooperation in Trade, Investment, and Technology

A look at U.S.-China competition in global trade and investment, especially emergent technologies and infrastructure. To what extent should both sides engage in greater decoupling for national security reasons? What do developing nations want, how has China’s BRI changed the landscape, and how effectively are the United States and its allies responding? Even amid growing strategic competition, can both parties work to define common norms of behavior in cyberspace and to cooperate on emergent technologies to address common problems?

Moderator:
Mark Wu, Director, Harvard University Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Henry L. Stimson Professor, Harvard Law School
Speakers:
Elizabeth Economy, Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution at Stanford University
Meg Rithmire, F. Warren McFarlan Associate Professor of Business of Administration, Harvard Business School
Dan Rosen, Co-Founder and Partner, Rhodium Group

2:25-2:35PM: Break

2:35-3:45PM: How Asian Countries See China and U.S.-China Competition

Much of Asia is stuck in the middle between longstanding relationships with the United States and the prospect of potential economic opportunity coming from China. How do Asian countries view China’s rise—as a threat or an economic opportunity? Are they fearful of falling into the “debt trap” that international analysts have warned of, or do they welcome Chinese investment? How are they affected by U.S. trade sanctions on China? What do they hope the United States will offer?

Moderator:
Fatema Z. Sumar, Executive Director, Harvard University Center for International Development
Speakers:
Ian Chong, Associate Professor of Political Science, National University of Singapore
Bopha Phorn, Nieman Fellow, Harvard University; independent journalist based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Ed Case, U.S. Congressman; Co-founder, Congressional Pacific Islands Caucus

3:45-4:00PM: Break

4:00-5:10PM: Toward Coexistence 2.0: What Should the U.S. Do?

If Coexistence 2.0 is to allow healthy competition and even some cooperation while avoiding unnecessary war, what needs to happen to get there, recognizing that China aspires to greater global influence than it already has? How can these two great powers collaborate more on global issues that matter, like climate change? What is U.S. policy already doing well to support U.S. interests and the rules-based international order? What could U.S. policy do better? Can the Thucydides trap be avoided, and how much do both sides really want to avoid it?

Moderator:
William Alford, Jerome A. and Joan L. Cohen Professor of Law; Director, East Asian Legal Studies, Harvard Law Schools
Speakers:
Jude Blanchette, Freeman Chair in China Studies, Center for Strategic and International Studies
Melanie Hart, Senior Advisor, Office of the Under Secretary for Economic Growth, Energy & the Environment, U.S. Department of State
Orville Schell, Arthur Ross Director, Center on U.S.-China Relations, Asia Society
Robert S. Ross, Professor of Political Science, Boston College; Research Associate, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies

5:10-5:50PM: What Does History Tell Us?

Winston Lord accompanied Henry Kissinger on his secret trip to China in 1971, and he has been helping to shape U.S. policy and watching China closely ever since. Lord served as ambassador to China from 1985-1989, tumultuous years that saw the country’s rapid opening up and then the crackdown on the 1989 democracy movement. He served as Assistant Secretary of State from 1993–1997.

Ambassador Winston Lord, Former Assistant Secretary of State; Former Ambassador to China
In conversation with Orville Schell, Arthur Ross Director, Center on U.S.-China Relations, Asia Society

5:50-6:00PM: Closing Remarks

Mark Wu, Director, Director, Harvard University Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies; Henry L. Stimson Professor, Harvard Law School
Tony Saich, Harvard Kennedy School Rajawali Foundation Institute for Asia; Daewoo Professor of International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School